Hidden Brain XX
[0] This is Hidden Brain.
[1] I'm Shankar Vedantam.
[2] When Aitan Hirsch was growing up, newspapers were a central part of the family's daily routine.
[3] My parents raised me and my siblings in a politically engaged environment.
[4] At least I thought so.
[5] You know, we always were, we knew what was going on in the news.
[6] The newspaper was delivered to our home.
[7] After Aitan went off to college, his father kept reading, listening to the radio, staying up to speed.
[8] And then, a few years ago, Aiton learned that his dad had devoured.
[9] developed a new habit.
[10] He would lie on his bed at night and watch cable news.
[11] Eton, now a political scientist, found this puzzling.
[12] I've never really gotten into cable news.
[13] It's never been something I've enjoyed.
[14] I asked him why I was doing it, and he said, you know, it's our duty to be informed.
[15] And I said, but you already are informed.
[16] You know, you've already read the newspaper.
[17] You've already listened to all the radio.
[18] What possibly more could you be getting from this?
[19] I think in the end it was pretty clear that he just likes politics.
[20] A lot of people like politics.
[21] And to decompress that night, you know, more than the Food Network, the Kardashians, whatever else is on TV, he likes watching cable news.
[22] Millions of Americans are like Aiton's dad.
[23] They eagerly follow television personalities and the ups and downs of the latest scandal in Washington.
[24] Nearly a month after the House passed two lame articles of impeachment against President Trump.
[25] Thanks for Washington.
[26] See, Nets and I, Don Lemon starts now.
[27] They know who testified on Capitol Hill.
[28] in the room between Democrats and Republicans.
[29] How is that at least perceived rivalry within the White House shaking out?
[30] And they know what the rumor mills are saying about the people in power at the White House.
[31] If you ask them why they follow the news so closely, they will tell you what Aitan's father told him.
[32] It's an act of civic virtue to stay informed.
[33] Aiton Hirsch is skeptical.
[34] He argues, provocatively, that what his dad is doing isn't really about politics or policy or elections.
[35] It's really just about his dad.
[36] It seemed to me that the way that people are doing politics is much more similar to a hobby than to what I think of politics, which is acquiring power.
[37] Today, we bring you a favorite episode from 2020 about a strange twist of modern politics in the United States.
[38] We live in a 24 -7 cycle of political news that saturates every corner of our culture.
[39] It seems like this has led to increased engagement in politics.
[40] But Aiton Hirsch says that engagement with politics for many of us has actually become more shallow.
[41] The paradox of our passion for politics this week on Hidden Brain.
[42] Aiton Hirsch is a political scientist at Tufts University.
[43] He studies voting, elections, and how we participate in politics.
[44] In his book, politics is for power.
[45] Aiton makes the case that millions of Americans are engaging in politics in ways that are emotionally satisfying, but ultimately self -defeating.
[46] They're there to serve their own emotional and intellectual needs.
[47] They're not trying to move anyone.
[48] They're not trying to empower anything.
[49] They're really just trying to learn and engage in a pretty frivolous way.
[50] So I would imagine that a lot of people listening to you would disagree with your assessment of them.
[51] I think a lot of people would say, I derive no entertainment from the shenanigans of the Republicans or the intransigence of the Democrats.
[52] In fact, I feel exhausted and dispirited by the state of our politics all the time.
[53] I think that's right.
[54] Some people probably would agree that, yeah, you know, being on Twitter all the time or sharing a meme about some silly news story is entertainment.
[55] But the feelings that they bring to politics are much deeper.
[56] They care and they feel hurt that politics isn't going the way they want it.
[57] And they feel joy when politics does go the way they want it.
[58] The thing is that what they're actually doing is not participating themselves in any active way.
[59] They're really just following the news.
[60] They're following the ups and downs of a presidential primary cycle.
[61] And so they themselves are not participating.
[62] Hmm.
[63] You introduce a word that I hadn't actually heard in the context of politics.
[64] You said that people are really pursuing.
[65] a hobby.
[66] They're in it for the fields, the thrill of debates, scoring points, and you call these people hobbyists.
[67] What do you mean by the term?
[68] Yeah, so, you know, I was kind of reading through some of the sociology literature on hobbies.
[69] And what are hobbies?
[70] They're things that are people doing either to, you know, they're learning facts.
[71] They learn facts about history.
[72] They learn facts about birds, whatever they want.
[73] Or they're engaging in collecting materials.
[74] or they're engaged in kind of crafts.
[75] And it seemed to me that the way that people are doing politics is much more similar to a hobby than to what I think of a politics, which is acquiring power.
[76] So they will learn a lot of facts and talk about those facts.
[77] They will participate in a kind of craft.
[78] Like they'll go online and share memes, have a discussion very similar to how sports fans, you know, listen to sports radio.
[79] They'll talk about the gossip of, you know, what this quarterback or that quarterback is doing.
[80] That's sort of the end of it.
[81] In politics, I think that's exactly what people are doing, too.
[82] If we define political participation as a form of engagement where you are trying to move public policy or electoral politics in a direction you care about, you know, you have your one vote and you're convincing another person to vote the way you want or to advocate the way you want, that really doesn't describe the behavior of what most people are doing when they're doing.
[83] politics.
[84] It looks much more like what they're doing is similar to a sports fanatic engaged in sports or a foodie, watching food shows, reading restaurant reviews.
[85] It seems much more in that category of life than in the category of power acquisition.
[86] So when I think about a hobby or I think about being a sports fan, I think about people who derive, you know, great satisfaction or great frustration from what's happening, they engage in it passionately, but ultimately they'd have to acknowledge that their involvement has little consequence.
[87] That's right.
[88] If they wanted to actually participate in politics seriously, they would go about this all differently.
[89] Instead of hating the other side, instead of hating a random person who says they're a Republican or says they're a Democrat, they would say, hmm, is this a neighbor that I can convince to move in my direction?
[90] and when we talk to organizers who are out every day in the trenches trying to convince other people to come along with them, they don't hate the other side.
[91] It's like totally the wrong frame of reference for them.
[92] They're thinking about how do I move a person?
[93] There might be a person on the other side who says they're a Republican and I'm a Democrat or says they're a Democrat and I'm a Republican.
[94] And my first reaction is, ugh, they believe all these things I think are despicable.
[95] But my second reaction, if I really care about moving them, is what do they care about that I care about, that I can leverage to move them in my direction?
[96] And in sports fandom and in the kind of shallow way that people engaged in partisan fandom, that second step is never made.
[97] There's never a goal to convince a Yankee fan to come to the Red Sox.
[98] It doesn't matter.
[99] And if you're online or only talking about politics to people who are exactly like you, there's no point of thinking of, a person on the other political party as someone you need to convince of anything.
[100] You don't.
[101] You don't need to convince them of anything because you're not doing anything.
[102] And if you're a Red Sox fan, of course, you are deriving satisfaction precisely from the camaraderie you have with like -minded people as opposed to reaching out to people who might actually be outside the echo chamber.
[103] That's right.
[104] I love being a Red Sox fan.
[105] And as I say in the book, I live right near Fenway Park.
[106] I've gone to Fenway Park and taken my children there, and the whole park at Fenway will chant.
[107] Yankees suck, Yankees suck over and all over again.
[108] They've done it for decades now.
[109] And it's all kind of a joke because the stakes are low.
[110] We don't really hate those people who are the Yankees fans or the Yankees players.
[111] It's a game, and it's fun to be part of it for a lot of people.
[112] So what explains the fact that in politics, people don't think of it as being fun?
[113] I mean, if you're a Democrat and you think Republicans are terrible, or you're a Republican and you think Democrats are terrible, you don't think of it as a game.
[114] You think of it as being deadly serious.
[115] Is that political hobbyism, too?
[116] What's political hobbyism is not whether you think it's deadly serious or not.
[117] It's whether the emotion is the end in itself or a means to an end.
[118] So in shortcut politics, in hobbyism, emotion is the goal.
[119] It makes you feel connected to something without doing anything yourself.
[120] It makes me feel I am part of this emotional high or I am part of this sad point, this low point, even though I'm not doing anything.
[121] I'm just following it, but the emotion is the connection.
[122] And of course we have a whole media apparatus and social media apparatus to make us feel those emotions.
[123] But in real politics, anger, righteous anger and emotion are something you leverage into action.
[124] If there's no second step there, you might feel like you're feeling political and partisan thoughts, but you're not channeling them effectively into anything else.
[125] So I want to examine your larger evidence for these claims, and I want to start with a revealing story you tell about two elections in your home state of Massachusetts.
[126] The first was in 2008, and it featured Barack Obama running for president, and the second, 14 months later, featured a special election for a Senate seat that had big implications for the balance of power in the Senate.
[127] Tell me what happened in those two races.
[128] So in 2008 in Massachusetts, Massachusetts, Massachusetts is a blue state.
[129] There was never going to be a question of who was going to win the election between Barack Obama and John McCain.
[130] Nevertheless, a lot of people were active and a lot of people voted.
[131] We project that Senator Obama will carry the state of Massachusetts.
[132] A very high turnout in Massachusetts, like in the rest of the country, for this presidential election, that in Massachusetts wasn't a close call.
[133] A few months later, the Democrats have control of the House.
[134] They have control of the Senate with 60 seats, which was important for the filibuster, and they have control of the White House.
[135] But now it's not so exciting, and there's a Senate race that comes, a special Senate race to replace the seat that Ted Kennedy held.
[136] He passed away.
[137] And the seat was between Scott Brown, Republican, and Martha Coakley, a Democrat.
[138] Now here, Massachusetts had a chance to really leverage, it's excitement for voting for something that really matter.
[139] Now Massachusetts really mattered because this turned out to be a close election, and the Democrats' control of 60 seats in the Senate was on the line.
[140] What happened?
[141] Democrats hold a three -to -one advantage over Republicans in the state, but the GOP candidates, Scott Brown, has waged an energetic campaign, and he's polling well against the Democrat Attorney General Martha Coakley.
[142] from the landslide Massachusetts election for Barack Obama to the really important Senate election turnout dropped precipitously and it especially dropped in highly Democratic areas.
[143] So when there was really a moment for Democrats in Massachusetts to say, you know what, even though politics right now maybe is down for the Democrats, maybe the candidate for our Senate seat is not as exciting as Barack Obama, we're going to come through because we really care about holding power.
[144] Instead, they sat at home.
[145] I thank the people of Massachusetts for electing me as your next United States senator.
[146] Scott Brown won that election.
[147] And so if you're only willing to vote when there's a celebrity or someone who really is drawing you in to the excitement, then you know you're going to not do so well in the downtimes when the chips are down for your party.
[148] You know, the candidates aren't as exciting, but the policy matters just as much.
[149] There's another story you tell about Massachusetts, and this one took place in 2019.
[150] Democrats asked students to go up to New Hampshire to canvas, or even just to canvas locally.
[151] And on another occasion, the students were asked if they wanted to take a road trip to meet Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg.
[152] What happened in each case?
[153] Yeah, so the Democrats at my college campus at Tufts, they do some events on campus, but they try really hard to get students to come with them to Canvas in New Hampshire.
[154] And the students told them, you know, it's just too far away.
[155] We can't go to New Hampshire.
[156] We have classes.
[157] We have stuff to do.
[158] And so in the 2018 election, they never got more than seven students to get in a car to New Hampshire, which, by the way, is like an hour away, to canvas.
[159] And then the story goes that there was a Pete Buttigieg event in Manchester, New Hampshire.
[160] And so the student, Dem said, okay, well, you know, does anyone want to come up to Manchester to meet Pete Buttigieg?
[161] We can take a selfie with them, posted on Instagram.
[162] And the student Democratic group could not find enough cars to accommodate all of the tough students who wanted to go and take a selfie with Pete Buttigieg.
[163] So perhaps the most elementary difference between those who think of politics as a means to power, as a means to affect policy, and those who think of it as an entertaining diversion is whether people show up to vote.
[164] I understand that you've run surveys where you ask people whether they voted and then you compare what they tell.
[165] you to records showing whether they actually voted.
[166] What do you find?
[167] So a lot of people, like almost half sometimes, of confirmed non -voters, that is people who the public record shows they did not vote.
[168] About half of them sometimes say they voted even when they didn't.
[169] And when a colleague and I tried to figure out, who are the kinds of people that lie about voting?
[170] We discovered essentially college -educated news followers lie a lot.
[171] When they don't vote, they say they voted anyway.
[172] Another piece of evidence you have about the rise of political hobbyism is a decline in interest in any election that is not about national issues or national candidates.
[173] Can you talk about this for a moment?
[174] How has interest in local elections, like mayoral races, for example?
[175] How has that changed in recent years, even as people have paid increasingly close attention to what's happening on the national stage?
[176] So a big part of that story has got to be the media, right?
[177] The media landscape is dramatically different.
[178] There's a lot fewer resources in local news and local newspapers, declining rates of engagement with even, you know, TV, local news.
[179] And there's a question about whether that's, you know, the supply and demand chain or the cause and effect relationship between interest in local news and availability of local news.
[180] But what's happened is that we have very, very few people voting locally and taking interest in what's happening in state and local politics.
[181] And so you have people, say, on the left who say, I really care about the environment or I really care about racial equality, but I'm not going to pay attention to the ways my state or city might work on those issues.
[182] I'm not going to apply any pressure to my state legislator to work on those issues because what's happening at the state and local levels kind of boring.
[183] And on the right, you see the same thing, but not as much.
[184] On the left, there's been this long history of particularly the kind of the well -educated wing of the Democratic Party, poo -pooing what's happening at the state and local level, say, nah, all the interesting stuff's got to be the national stuff.
[185] So you're pointing to something really interesting, which is that political hobbyists might be found in all parties, but there are important differences between the parties, but also on other fronts.
[186] You find that political hobbyists are not distributed equally across the spectrum between men and women or between the rich and poor.
[187] Can you talk about those differences for a moment?
[188] Sure.
[189] So first of all, when you look at groups on both parties, but particularly on the left, that are involved in community organizing, that are involved in party committees and groups, you see it's mostly women.
[190] If you go to any of the indivisible groups, which are popped up since the Trump election, it's about two -thirds women.
[191] But when you are online or you survey people about how interested they are in politics, how many facts they know about politics, that's predominantly men.
[192] You also see this phenomenon that, you know, if you look at like if you, you know, when I survey people and say, how much time are you spending on politics?
[193] You see the most time people are spending politics is among college educated white men.
[194] And part of the story there is a racial story that like African Americans and Latinos in the Democratic Party are spending less time, say, thinking, reading about politics, but much more time engaged in community organizations than college -educated white liberals.
[195] And the story behind that is about how satisfied you are with the status quo.
[196] And the folks who were pretty satisfied with the status quo talked a lot about important things, civil rights and so forth, but were much less engaged in empowerment.
[197] When we come back, the powerful implications of political hobbyism on both the left and the right.
[198] I'm Shankar Vedantam, and you're listening to Hidden Brain.
[199] This is Hidden Brain.
[200] I'm Shankar Vedantam.
[201] Today, we're listening back to my 2020 conversation with political scientist Etan Hirsch.
[202] He says that millions of Americans engage in politics as a form of self -expression rather than as a mechanism.
[203] for real change.
[204] And he says there is one central difference between hobbyists and people who are serious about getting stuff done.
[205] The serious people are less interested in how they feel and more interested in acquiring and using power.
[206] Aiton met a man who was serious about that kind of power.
[207] He lived in the Boston area.
[208] He was known locally as the Ukrainian boss.
[209] So this man was a mystery to me. Someone told me there was this elderly man living in this neighborhood of Boston called Brighton, who was somehow a boss that he controlled a thousand votes.
[210] And I really wanted to figure out, like, who was this person?
[211] How did he control a thousand votes?
[212] So I asked if I could meet him.
[213] This man, his name is Knock.
[214] He came to the United States from the former USSR, from Ukraine, and he was a leader in a retirement community of mostly older Russian Jews in this neighborhood in Brighton.
[215] He was like one of the, you know, he organized community events.
[216] But in the 90s, Congress and President Clinton passed a welfare reform bill.
[217] And in the original law, legal immigrants, including those living in old age homes, were going to be turned away from benefits like food stamps or disability.
[218] And this is a major problem because for the folks living in Knox building and for many retired communities throughout the country, this was the main source of their food.
[219] And so there was panic.
[220] And Nach, as the community leader, he started to advocate a little bit going on radio, doing some interviews.
[221] But he and his wife started to try to get as many people citizenship as quickly as they can.
[222] So a lot of these people were eligible for citizenship, but their English wasn't great.
[223] They had to practice for this, you know, 20 questions on a test about the Bill of Rights and stuff like that.
[224] They had to be able to write a sentence, talk to someone.
[225] And so, Nach and his wife trained all these people to take the citizenship test.
[226] in a couple years, they got 300 of their neighbors' citizenship.
[227] Soon after, he decided to leverage his central point in this community for politics.
[228] He learned that someone who's in a state legislative office or on the city council can do a lot for this community who care about certain policies like immigration, but they also care about transatlantic.
[229] transportation issues, you know, getting the snow shoveled to their building.
[230] And so Nah and his so -called lieutenants started filling out a sample ballot.
[231] You know, they would get a sample ballot.
[232] They would mark who they thought the community should vote for.
[233] They make photocopies and they'd hand it out in their building.
[234] The building has about a thousand people in it.
[235] The precinct voting booths are actually in the building itself.
[236] And so Nach and his lieutenant started getting out the vote among people in their building.
[237] And pretty soon you can see this in the public records of turnout, Nox precinct would have two or three times the voting rates of all the neighboring precincts.
[238] You start seeing politicians paying attention to him, calling him on his birthday, walking him to the grocery store.
[239] And like nobody knows about this guy, right?
[240] I mean, no one in Boston outside of the political establishment and outside of his community knows about him.
[241] But to his own community, he's a hero.
[242] Basically, he and his wife did decades of favors for people in their community, and were really nice people.
[243] They built a lot of trust, and with that trust came the opportunity to influence people's votes.
[244] In other words, what he was providing to his community was really a form of service.
[245] It was less about saying, here's a set of values or ideological issues that I care about.
[246] It's saying, you know, there's a very humble way of thinking about leadership, which is, you care about the potholes, I care about the potholes.
[247] You care about the snow being shoveled.
[248] And it's less about Republican versus Democrat.
[249] It's less about big issues.
[250] It's much more, I mean, I suppose it's much more transactional.
[251] It's much more parochial and less ideological.
[252] That's right.
[253] But even if you cared about those ideological issues mainly, even if you did, the path to getting people to care about what you care about is still Knox path.
[254] That is, if you wanted to move people on climate change, but it's hard to explain climate change or you want to move people on, you know, a nationalized health care, but it's really hard to explain those details.
[255] Most people are not going to want to talk to you about that.
[256] But if you're kind to them and you take them seriously and you serve their more immediate needs, then when an election comes, even by the way when there's not a celebrity on the ballot, they say, oh, I'll vote your way because you, Nach, the Ukrainian boss, I respect you.
[257] And you're telling me this thing to do.
[258] And I'll do it because maybe you know more about this than I do.
[259] Or, you know, maybe I should just go along with you because you've done so many nice things for me. So whether your goals are just fixing potholes or your goals are, you know, international climate change, the methods are very similar.
[260] The Ukrainian boss acquired power by providing basic services, food stamps, snow shoveling, help with a citizenship test.
[261] By contrast, political hobbyists often get involved when politics is about what Aiton calls.
[262] Paul's post -materialist issues.
[263] Take the kinds of petitions that people sign.
[264] A colleague of mine, Brian Schaffner and I, started looking into this petition program that the Obama administration instituted early on in his administration.
[265] The idea was, on the White House website, you could collect digital signatures, and if you got enough signatures, the White House would respond to you.
[266] And you could download the data on this, And so Brian Schaffner and I, we download the data, and we started looking at, you know, what kind of petitions were being signed, how many people were signing them.
[267] And we discovered something that really amazes me still, which is that most of them were about really small and mostly frivolous things.
[268] Some of them were just jokes, you know, the U .S. should build a death star.
[269] But most of them were not like that.
[270] They were just about smaller issues, a problem of puppy mills or regulating of premium cigars.
[271] Stuff that, you know, is important, but doesn't affect the kind of, you know, the general welfare of someone who's struggling to get by.
[272] And so political scientists for a long time have noticed a shift in politics away from bread and butter issues, away from people getting food on their table and having good jobs and all that, and towards post -materialist issues, issues that are not about economic welfare or, you know, education, but there's other stuff.
[273] So I want to spend a little time talking about the role of money in politics and the relationship between money in politics and the rise of what you call hobbyism.
[274] You once conducted a survey where you asked people if they'd be willing to make a donation.
[275] I think it was $1 ,000 to attend a dinner with a prominent leader.
[276] And some people were told the money would go to fund a political campaign, but others were told the money would go to an event management company and, in fact, would have no bearing whatsoever, no impact on policy or a political campaign.
[277] electoral politics.
[278] What did you find?
[279] In that survey, we found that almost as many people would give $1 ,000 to have a dinner with a politician, even if the money wasn't going to the party.
[280] That is, even though in that situation the money wouldn't be seen by the politician as something that they should reciprocate with favors, even if it didn't serve the interests of a political party or campaign, people were just willing to give money.
[281] So they said, to attend the dinner.
[282] So this survey experiment tried to allow us to say, well, okay, well, how much of it is just purely entertainment?
[283] And the thesis then from this study is that some significant portion of these big dollar donations are in fact tied to self -expression of wanting to say, I'm getting a photograph with a presidential candidate, not so much that I want some specific outcome from that candidate.
[284] That's right.
[285] So these are big money donors.
[286] And as people hear what you said, they might say, all right, this tells me that small money donations are really the way to go.
[287] Those are the donations that are untainted by political hobbyism.
[288] But unfortunately, you don't agree with that.
[289] And you describe what happened when Republican Congressman Joe Wilson interrupted a State of the Union speech by President Barack Obama.
[290] First of all, remind us what happened in that incident, what followed, and what it tells us about small money donations.
[291] Right.
[292] So Barack Obama was speaking before Congress about the health care law, and Congressman Wilson shouted at him from the seat in the House of Representatives saying, you lie.
[293] And it was a departure from the norms of kind of appropriate behavior in Congress.
[294] But soon after, in the days following, Congressman Wilson earned $2 million in online donations.
[295] And this is consistent with what we see across the board in donations, which is the way to get a lot of money, if you're a politician, from small dollar donors, is by being really provocative, by being outrageous, by doing the stuff that Donald Trump does.
[296] And it should be no surprise that the best small dollar fundraiser, it's not Bernie Sanders, it's not Elizabeth Warren.
[297] It's Donald Trump.
[298] So the media by your account are both the beneficiary and the driver of political hobbyism.
[299] They encourage people to think of politics as a sport with daily winners and daily losers, different channels for fans of different teams.
[300] And you cite clips like this one from MSNBC's Rachel Maddow.
[301] CNN reports, and we have confirmed that Manafort has now settled into sort of his forever home at FCI Loretto, which is the Federal Correctional Institute at Loretto, Pennsylvania, which is about halfway between Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.
[302] Fun fact about FCI Loretto used to be a Catholic seminary.
[303] Now it is home to Donald J. Trump, presidential campaign chairman, inmate number 35207 -016.
[304] What does that clip tell you, Aetan?
[305] So I've learned exactly nothing from that clip, right?
[306] I've learned that Manafort went to jail.
[307] I didn't need to know his present ID number.
[308] If I did, I could just look it up.
[309] It's Googlable.
[310] I didn't need to know about the details of the prison.
[311] But that sounded like Rachel Maddow was just taking me on some deep dive.
[312] There were numbers read out loud.
[313] There were facts given to me. But it doesn't in any way help me be a citizen.
[314] It doesn't help me learn how to use my role.
[315] It doesn't help me learn about how I can engage in the political process.
[316] So what is it for?
[317] It's for entertainment.
[318] So we've looked at how political hobbyism can affect voters and donors and the media.
[319] And you've hinted at this in the past, but it also affects the behavior of politicians.
[320] What kind of positions does hobbyism encourage politicians to stake out?
[321] And perhaps just as importantly, what kind of positions does it discourage them from exploring?
[322] So the main thing it does is it encourages politicians to respond to the short -term demands for instant gratification that the hobbyists want.
[323] If you know that the way to make a lot of money in small dollar donations is to be very provocative to get a viral video of yourself yelling at someone, then that's what you're going to do.
[324] That's what you're going to do in an impeachment hearing or a hearing for a Supreme Court Justice nominee.
[325] That's what we're going to do in the debate stage.
[326] You know, we had this moment early in the presidential primary debate where Kamala Harris went after Joe Biden very harshly about this issue of busing.
[327] And it turned out the policy differences between them weren't that big.
[328] It wasn't clear in the end what Senator Harris' position was.
[329] But immediately after that debate, Senator Harris raised a ton of money online for people who were excited to see her so -called destroy Joe Biden.
[330] And so if we, the hobbyists, give that incentive to politicians, and that's how they're going to behave.
[331] You mentioned Donald Trump a second ago.
[332] I want to play you a short clip of President Donald Trump speaking at a rally in North Carolina some time ago, where he singled out a Democratic congresswoman, Representative Ilhan Omar.
[333] Omar has a history of launching vicious, anti -Semitic screams.
[334] So when you listen to a clip like this, Aitan, you know, obviously the crowd is very energized by what President Trump is saying.
[335] But of course, it also energizes people on the left who believe he's singling out a congresswoman, a woman of color, treating her especially badly.
[336] And in some ways, it's a textbook example of how one comment from the president can trigger hobbyism on both sides.
[337] That's right.
[338] First of all, that whole scene of the President Trump going to a rally and all those people chanting against Representative Omar responding to Trump, singling her out, is really a classic example of the parallel between what's happening in politics and what happened in sports.
[339] I mean, it feels like a sports stadium saying Yankee suck.
[340] It feels like that.
[341] And it feels like it can be dangerous, just like we have around the world sports arena chance like that turning into violence.
[342] It can happen in politics too.
[343] And on the left, we also have, you know, maybe a day after that of Twitter responses.
[344] And, you know, instead of spending time on thinking about what a voter can do as a citizen, or not just thinking about, but taking some action, we're wasting all energy on both sides arguing about this thing.
[345] I want you to read an excerpt from your book.
[346] I think this is on page 82 toward the bottom.
[347] It's the paragraph starting, so there it is.
[348] In many ways, I think it sums up what we've been talking about the last half an hour or so.
[349] So there it is.
[350] What news do political junkies demand?
[351] Outrage and gossip.
[352] Why?
[353] Because it's alluring.
[354] What news?
[355] What news do we avoid?
[356] Local news.
[357] Why?
[358] It's boring.
[359] What do we think of our partisan opponents?
[360] We hate them.
[361] Do we really hate them?
[362] No. But politics is more fun if we root for a team and spew anger at the other side.
[363] It's easier to hate and dismiss the other side than to empathize and connect to them.
[364] When do we vote?
[365] When there's a spectacle.
[366] When do we click?
[367] When politics can be a frivolous distraction.
[368] When do we donate?
[369] When there's a cocktail party or a viral video.
[370] What are we doing?
[371] We're taking actions not to empower our political values, but to satisfy our passion for the sport of politics.
[372] When we come back, even as many political hobbyists expand their energies on the latest outrage on Twitter, Aiton Hirsch argues there are other people who are very serious about acquiring and wielding power.
[373] These are the people who end up shaping policy.
[374] You're listening to Hidden Brain.
[375] I'm Shankar Vedantam.
[376] This is Hidden Brain.
[377] I'm Shankar Vedantam.
[378] political scientist Eitan Hirsch makes the case that many Americans engage in politics in the same way that sports fans engage with their teams as a form of entertainment and self -expression.
[379] At the same time, people who are more serious about acquiring and wielding power are quietly going in a different direction.
[380] Eton says that in 2018, the Ku Klux Klan made the rounds in North Carolina.
[381] The group wasn't talking to people about racial issues, but something else entirely.
[382] Yeah, there were news reports that the Ku Kluxklan, North Carolina, was going around with flyers, targeting opioid addicts and saying, you know, do you have an addiction?
[383] It's not your fault.
[384] And we hear at the White Knights, the KKK can help you through it.
[385] Why would they do that?
[386] I think they would do that because they know their path to getting more recruits, to building political power, is not necessarily by telling people that they have this hateful ideology, but by saying, hey, we're going to take care of people.
[387] And if no one else is taking care of people who are suffering from addiction, then they're going to get some people on their side.
[388] In many ways, it's actually the model of the Ukrainian boss, right?
[389] It's basically asking not how do I bring people over to where I am, or at least not asking that question at first, but really asking people, where are you?
[390] What are the issues that you care about?
[391] What's happening in your life?
[392] How can I be of help to you in dealing with these issues and forming a connection with people and then bringing them over and say, you know, we obviously have this connection.
[393] You should support me on this thing that I care a lot about.
[394] That's right.
[395] I think everyone who cares about politics, even if you're, you know, the classic hobbyist, you want to help people.
[396] And the question is, how do you do it?
[397] And what you see across the political spectrum from the far right, you also see it across the world in groups like Hamas that have gained power in the Arab world.
[398] You see people saying, okay, we're not going to necessarily talk to you about ideology because, A, policy is complicated and ideology.
[399] You might not agree with us and everything.
[400] Instead, what we're going to do is we're going to try to take care of you.
[401] I remember a conversation I had with the anthropologist Scott Atrin, and he has studied the rise of groups such as ISIS.
[402] And he told me that even though the group might have these really radical goals, the immediate, practical thing they do is not talk about, you know, the destruction of infidels, but really they provide social services, educational services, a safety net, and the very kind of practical, parochial issues that cause people to say, this is a group that really cares about us.
[403] That's right.
[404] And this is what political parties used to do back in the day when they were giving out, you know, free turkeys and vaccine shots and serving needs that the government eventually picked up some of those needs.
[405] But the political parties were the ones doing it.
[406] You see that's what Knox doing, taking care of people.
[407] You have an interesting suggestion for both the Republican Party and the Democratic Party, and it's based on something that you noticed at Tufts University where you work, where your school offers faculty members backup child care.
[408] What was the idea?
[409] So the idea is that, you know, where I work at Tufts, if I ever can't, if, you know, I have three little kids, so this obviously really spoke to me. But this also is true if you have elderly parents that you're taking care of.
[410] If you ever need backup care, you can go to this, website, and Tufts will highly subsidize emergency backup care for something like 20 days a year.
[411] Now, I've never used this benefit personally, but it's important to me that it's there.
[412] It shows that the university cares about people who are taking care of their kids or taking care of elderly parents, and those who use it really do benefit from it.
[413] My suggestion was imagining political parties doing things like that, providing emergency child care and emergency elder care, maybe contracting with one of these companies that do this.
[414] And by doing that, they're saying, hey, we have some big policy goals here.
[415] You know, maybe on the Democratic side, we really care about getting family leave passed in this country.
[416] And it might take us a little while to do that.
[417] But in the meantime, what we're going to do is we're going to show you as concretely as possible that we care about you and we care about these needs.
[418] And the way we're going to do that is instead of sending you like endless ads about how great we are.
[419] Call us if you have a problem.
[420] Tell us.
[421] Are you going through something where you need an emergency backup, child care provider, elder care provider?
[422] Are you going through an addiction problem?
[423] Political parties should be at the forefront of solving these problems.
[424] And would this even be legal to do?
[425] So yeah, it's complicated.
[426] It's going to be different state by state.
[427] But right now, there is a broad ability for parties to engage in what are called party building activities.
[428] They're not allowed to trade favors or give assistance in exchange for a vote in an election.
[429] But they're allowed to do stuff that promotes their party brand that says, hey, we're the Democratic Party or we're the Republican Party and we care about you and you should like our brand.
[430] And we can run a pancake breakfast.
[431] We can host a carnival.
[432] We can we can do a whole bunch of stuff that is for that purpose.
[433] This is within the historical role of what a political party is supposed to do.
[434] So there are people who are clearly taking to heart the ideas that you're talking about in the book.
[435] You cite the example of an activist named Dave Fleischer.
[436] When he goes around canvassing, he tells people a personal story about his high school girlfriend.
[437] What's the story, Etan?
[438] And why does Dave tell people that story?
[439] So Dave tells the story of his high school girlfriend and this very intimate story, really, about how he had a high school girlfriend to begin with.
[440] We later learned that Dave is gay and knew he was gay from the time he was a kid.
[441] And he had a high school girlfriend, because in high school, that's what he's supposed to do to fit in.
[442] This is in 1970s.
[443] And he and his girlfriend weren't having sex, and he talks about that publicly, and he talks about the fact that he didn't want to have sex with her.
[444] And she in the end felt bad that, like, what was wrong with her.
[445] And he tells a story to strangers at the door.
[446] Maybe he's canvassing on behalf of abortion rights.
[447] And he's saying, you know, I'm a gay man. What do I know about abortion rights?
[448] Well, I can tell you a story that really speaks to me about why I take a pro -choice position.
[449] And that my pro -choice comes from position of understanding all the complicated reasons why people have sex, why people might accidentally get pregnant.
[450] And he tells that story, to try to make a connection.
[451] Because on a lot of issues, the person at the other side of that door might not have a strongly held view or might have a view that changes in light of a story like Dave shares.
[452] Maybe they're really strongly positioned on this issue, and they're never really going to move on it in Dave's direction.
[453] At least maybe they've built some mutual understanding with one another, Dave and the person at the door.
[454] On the other hand, it might be that this is the person who wasn't sure what they thought.
[455] or had mixed feelings.
[456] And Dave's intimate story, Dave's story about his personal life, helps them see why this is so important to him.
[457] Dave's method is to say, well, let me be vulnerable to you.
[458] Let me open myself up to you.
[459] And in return, maybe you might do the same.
[460] And you might better understand why I'm talking to you about politics today.
[461] I'm wondering if you can talk a little bit about the fact that this approach, which is sometimes called deep canvassing, was initially received with some skepticism in the academic community.
[462] But you say there has been subsequent work that has reestablished the value of this technique.
[463] Yeah, this was a strange situation for the discipline of political science.
[464] The initial studies of this were done by this grad student who ended up fabricating the data.
[465] And so the initial results, which were very highly publicized, were all retracted.
[466] The study was retracted.
[467] It was very embarrassing.
[468] But the people who discovered the problem discovered it because they wanted to actually do it too.
[469] They discovered all these irregularities in the data when they tried to replicate what they were doing.
[470] So after the scandal broke, these same scholars did a new study that wasn't obviously fabricated.
[471] That was very rigorously done.
[472] And they found similar results.
[473] That is, that the deep canvassing is very effective.
[474] It's particularly effective at this very hard task of persuasion.
[475] The reason to do deep canvassing is not to remind people to vote.
[476] It's pretty easy to remind someone to vote.
[477] It's very hard to convince someone to change their mind about an issue.
[478] And so deep canvassing is one of the most effective ways, if not the most effective way, to do that.
[479] Now, it's time -consuming.
[480] It's hard to train people.
[481] It's hard to convince people to do this very awkward thing.
[482] But in the end, it's effective.
[483] What Aiton is suggesting that we take time to deeply engage, engage with people who disagree with us can seem like an exercise in futility.
[484] Our modern world is so divided.
[485] Misinformation is everywhere.
[486] The idea that ordinary people would be able to successfully change the minds of their opponents, that seems like a pipe dream.
[487] I think quite the opposite.
[488] It's the only thing you can do.
[489] This book is written for someone who wants to understand their role in our democracy.
[490] Their role is not to follow what Trump does.
[491] no one is depending on them to follow the news about Donald Trump's tweets.
[492] No one is depending on them to have a hot take on Facebook.
[493] But there are ways in which they can be in communities where people are depending on them, depending on them to get to a meeting, to show up, to move policy in their direction.
[494] If they really care about something like climate change, guess what?
[495] The regional transportation system in their state might sound boring, but it's pretty important to solving that problem and they, as a citizen by themselves and the group that's organized locally, can have a role to play in that.
[496] They can help their own neighbors move forward on some issues that they care about.
[497] They have no role to play in the national political scene.
[498] Yes, they can vote.
[499] But no one needs them.
[500] The country doesn't need them to follow Twitter.
[501] But I would say that the point of this book is that to tell the reader, hey, like, your country really does need you to do something.
[502] And it's not going to be following Twitter.
[503] It's going to be talking to your neighbors, building a community, getting organized, moving policy, doing what Nakh does, trying to get a thousand people to do what you want to do.
[504] Eton Hirsch is a political scientist at Tufts University.
[505] He's the author of Politics is for Power, How to Move Beyond Political Hobbism, Take Action, and Make Real Change.
[506] Aitan, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
[507] Thanks for having me. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
[508] Our production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Laura Querell, Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
[509] Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
[510] I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
[511] Fact -checking is a crucial element of the work we do on every episode of Hidden Brain.
[512] That's why our unsung hero today is Barclay Walsh.
[513] Barclay is a fact -checker at NPR, and she helped us verify some of the claims we made into today's show.
[514] Thank you, Bartley.
[515] If you enjoy today's episode, please share it with a friend or neighbor.
[516] Better yet, share it with someone you don't know well and start a new conversation.
[517] I'm Shankar Vedantam.
[518] See you soon.